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The Rural Voice, 1999-05, Page 42WELLESLEY LOADING CHUTES SHEEP FEEDERS ROUND BALE FEEDERS LOADING CHUTES • Heavy Construction • 3 Pt. hitch (both sides) • Ramp settings 26" - 42" d ?, • I,0"� ' ice"' ,, i . oviim !rwt. SHEEP FEEDERS , 5 7 i i ilittlymiTi WOOF/AN • Ruggedly built yet convenient feeder • Manufactured with 1" x 1" tubing and 14 gauge sheet metal • 32" wide trough with 3/8" rod V-type manger Rods are 2 1/2" apart for less hay waste • Grains and other fine particle feeds can be fed. Sizes available: 4', 6' and 8' long. Other sizes available upon request. ROUND BALE FEEDERS Ilieli 1 I;f1/.�, _ .ail Jtt:l11108 •7'x8' • Feeds approx. 18 cattle • Holds 5' x 5' bales • (and smaller) +, • 1 1/4" tubing CRNl1ONNMNDE • Heavy duty construction TILMAN SHERK R.R. #3 Wellesley. Ontario 519-656-3338 , 519-656-3429 evenings 38 THE RURAL VOICE purebred registration. Whcn they returned, they began building their purebred hcrd back up but they didn't have enough quota because part of the quota repurchase deal fell though. It's been a long, hard haul to rebuild the purebred milking shorthorn hcrd, hunting down some of his original herd and purchasing offspring and buying a bull from • Ptince Edward Island. Today, with his herd increasing, he has only a quarter to a third of the quota he needs to cover his production but he can't afford to buy more at whole milk prices. The solution that O'Neill and the Ontario Cream Prod- ucers Association has been promoting is a pool from which cream producers could rcnt quota. The pool, O'Neill said in a March 17 letter to Noble Villeneuve, Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs, "will permit cream producers to pay an affordable price for the privilege of selling their butterfat. We feel the plan could be expanded to serve small-scale milk producers and could even be used as a model for other commodities on small scale farm operations." DFO, O'Neill says, has agreed to the concept and agreed to provide staff and resources to help "fine tune" the proposal. Villeneuve, in an interview, said he is waiting for suggcstions from DFO as to solutions to the problem. There are many problems to be worked out about a borrowers pool, he says such as who owns the capital value of the quota in the pool. While DFO has offered co- operation to the cream producers, it will not finance the pool, so cream producers would have to find their own financing. O'Neill had earlier approachcd Jim Wheeler, assistant deputy' minister with the idea but in a letter dated February 2 of this year, Wheeler wrote "You need to know that, based on my recent explorations with my colleagues, there is no support in any event for the ministry becoming financially involved in the lenders' pool." O'Neill says the cream producers are waiting for a response from Villeneuve himself. "I have the feeling it's time he assumed some leadership," O'Neill says. "In 1995 he said (amalgamating the pools) would be a good thing for all dairy producers. We don't want a hand out, — we just want a policy that will make it possible to keep the industry." Bennett says that if the government wants to find the money it has only to look at the contributions the Old Order communities have made in recent years. For instance, when farm registration was A lenders'pool required in order to get would help a farm tax rebate, the p — Old Order farmers no but who would longer applied for the pay rebate. He cstimates the windfall to the government was $5 million, more than enough to finance a lenders pool to solve the problem of the small-scale dairy producers. What's more, Bennett argues, these families are tax -payers but not tax -receivers. The 1,500 OId Order families in Ontario pay school taxes but run their own schools without government support, he says. Bennett estimates that with an average of three children per family, the OId Order colonies save the government a minimum of $21 million a year in education costs. "Our point of view is that it's payback time for the Old Order community," Sennett says. "It's the right thing to do. The taxpayers would be supportive." Ropp feels the government's program to help create jobs for rural youth could be put to good use to create a pool which would help young OId Order farmers get started. A little bit of money put into a quota borrowing pool would create a lot of jobs in the Old Order communities, he maintains. Even if the money isn't available there's another possible solution that wouldn't cost money, both O'Neill and Bennett say. They point to the situation in the egg industry where small scale flocks of 100 or fewer hens (500 for producers who have always kept that number) have been exempt from quota. Currently, O'Neill says, there are 700 million hens under quota and about 350,000